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Google Hacking 101

Google Hacking 101. Edited by Matt Payne, CISSP 15 June 2005 http://MattPayne.org/talks/gh. Outline. Google Bombing Schneier in Secrets and Lies Attack at a distance Emergent behavior Automation Google as a mirror “Interesting Searches” Software versions

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Google Hacking 101

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  1. Google Hacking 101 Edited by Matt Payne, CISSP 15 June 2005 http://MattPayne.org/talks/gh

  2. Outline • Google Bombing • Schneier in Secrets and Lies • Attack at a distance • Emergent behavior • Automation • Google as a mirror • “Interesting Searches” • Software versions • Passwords, credit card numbers, ISOs • CGI Scanning • Vulnerable software • Defense against Google Hacking

  3. Google Bombing != Google Hacking • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_bomb • A Google bomb or Google wash is an attempt to influence the ranking of a given site in results returned by the Googlesearch engine. Due to the way that Google's Page Rank algorithm works, a website will be ranked higher if the sites that link to that page all use consistent anchor text.

  4. Simply Put • “Google allows for a great deal of target reconnaissance that results in little or no exposure for the attacker.” – Johnny Long • Using Google as a “mirror” searches find: • Google searches for Credit Card and SS #s • Google searches for passwords • CGI (active content) scanning

  5. Anatomy of a Search Server Side Client Side http://computer.howstuffworks.com/search-engine1.htm

  6. How Google Finds Pages • Are only connected web pages indexed? • NO! • Opera submits every URL viewed to Google for later indexing….

  7. Johnny.ihackstuff.com • Johnny Long • Wrote Google Hacking for Penetration Testers; ISBN 1931836361 • Many free online articles. • Two PDFs cached at MattPayne.org/talks/gh • See the references slide • Or just use google 

  8. Google and Zero Day Attacks • Slashdot Headline: Net Worm Uses Google to Spread: • Posted by michael on Tue Dec 21, '04 06:15 PMfrom the web-service-takes-on-new-meaning dept.troop23 writes "A web worm that identifies potential victims by searching Google is spreading among online bulletin boards using a vulnerable version of the program phpBB, security professionals said on Tuesday. Almost 40,000 sites may have already been infected. In an odd twist if you use Microsoft's Search engine to scan for the phrase 'NeverEverNoSanity'-- part of the defacement text that the Santy worm uses to replace files on infected Web sites--returns nearly 39,000 hits." Reader pmf sent in a few more information links: F-Secure weblog and Bugtraq posting. Update: 12/22 03:34 GMT by T: ZephyrXero links to this news.com article that says Google is now squashing requests generated by the worm.

  9. Local Example • Monday 14 February, 2005@10:11amUpdate: Now it sounds like everyone was hit with an exploit on awstats which took out quite a few bloggers and other sites. ==> Actually, phorum got hit with it too!After running my server something.net for quite awhile on 'borrowed time', it eventually got hacked into - just this weekend. The "Simiens Crew" took credit to a webpage defacement, and by doing some googling... they've hit quite a few websites even just this last weekend! My best guess so far was an attack on one of my many 3rd-party PHP-run services that I have not taken the time to watch and patch for security announcements. Could have been gallery, phorum, webcalendar, icalendar, etc... I'll do some investigating and hopefully find out. I may have been lucky though, it sounds like these were just defacements and not all-out attacks, other victims have not reported any data loss at least. I can respect that. What I can't respect though is the many defacements they've put up with "FrontPage" as the HTML generator!

  10. Enough BS, How Do I Get Results? • Pick your keywords carefully & be specific • Do NOT exceed 10 keywords • Use Boolean modifiers • Use advanced operators • Google ignores some words*: a, about, an, and, are, as, at, be, by, from, how, i, in, is, it, of, on, or, that, the, this, to, we, what, when, where, which, with *From: Google 201, Advanced Googology - Patrick Crispen, CSU

  11. Google's Boolean Modifiers • AND is always implied. • OR: Escobar (Narcotics OR Cocaine) • "-" = NOT: Escobar -Pablo • "+" = MUST: Escobar +Roberto • Use quotes for exact phrase matching: • "nobody puts baby in a corner"

  12. Wildcards • Google supports word wildcards but NOT stemming. • "It's the end of the * as we know it" works. • but "American Psycho*" won't get you decent results on American Psychology or American Psychophysics.

  13. Advanced Searching Advanced Search Page: http://www.google.com/advanced_search

  14. cache: define: info: intext: intitle: inurl: link: related: stocks: filetype: numrange 1973..2005 source: phonebook: Advanced Operators DEMO: on-2-13-1973..2004 visa 4356000000000000..4356999999999999 http://www.googleguide.com/advanced_operators.html and http://tinyurl.com/5yjnx

  15. Review: Basic Search • Use the plus sign (+) to force a search for an overly common word. Use the minus sign (-) to exclude a term from a search. No space follows these signs. • To search for a phrase, supply the phrase surrounded by double quotes (" "). • A period (.) serves as a single-character wildcard. • An asterisk (*) represents any word—not the completion of a word, as is traditionally used. • Source: http://tinyurl.com/dnhc3

  16. Advanced Operators • Google advanced operators help refine searches. Advanced operators use a syntax such as the following: • operator:search_term • Notice that there's no space between the operator, the colon, and the search term. • The site: operatorinstructs Google to restrict a search to a specific web site or domain. The web site to search must be supplied after the colon. • The link: operatorinstructs Google to search within hyperlinks for a search term. • The cache: operatordisplays the version of a web page as it appeared when Google crawled the site. The URL of the site must be supplied after the colon. • Turn off images and you can look at pages without being logged on the server! Google as a mirror.

  17. Other parts • Google searches not only the content of a page, but the title and URL as well. • The intitle: operator instructs Google to search for a term within the title of a document. • The inurl: operatorinstructs Google to search only within the URL (web address) of a document. The search term must follow the colon. • To find every web page Google has crawled for a specific site, use the site: operator. • Source: http://tinyurl.com/dnhc3

  18. What Can Google Search? • The filetype:operator instructs Google to search only within the text of a particular type of file. The file type to search must be supplied after the colon. Don't include a period before the file extension. • Everything listed at http://filext.com/ claims Johnny. Can also ,e.g., say filetype:phps to only search .phps files. • filetype:phps mysql_connect • Adobe Portable Document Format (pdf) • Adobe PostScript (ps) • Lotus 1-2-3 (wk1, wk2, wk3, wk4, wk5, wki, wks, wku) • MacWrite (mw) • Microsoft Excel (xls) • Microsoft PowerPoint (ppt) • Microsoft Word (doc) • Microsoft Works (wks, wps, wdb) • Microsoft Write (wri) • Rich Text Format (rtf) • Shockwave Flash (swf) • Text (ans, txt) • And many more….

  19. Directory Listings • Directory Listings • Show server version information • Useful for an attacker • intitle:index.of server.at • intitle:index.of server.at site:aol.com • Finding Directory Listings • intitle:index.of "parent directory" • intitle:index.of name size • Displaying variables • “Standard” demo and debugging program • “HTTP_USER_AGENT=Googlebot” • Frequently an avenue for remote code execution • http://somebox.someU.edu/~user/demo.cgi?cmd=`cat /etc/passwd`

  20. Default Pages • Default Pages are another way to find specific versions of server software…. Apache Server VersionQuery Apache 1.3.0–1.3.9 Intitle:Test.Page.for.Apache It.worked! this.web.site! Apache1.3.11–1.3.26 Intitle:Test.Page.for.Apache seeing.this.instead Apache 2.0 Intitle:Simple.page.for.Apache Apache.Hook.Functions Apache SSL/TLS Intitle:test.page "Hey, it worked !" "SSL/TLS-aware" Many IIS servers intitle:welcome.to intitle:internet IIS Unknown IIS server intitle:"Under construction" "does not currently have" IIS 4.0 intitle:welcome.to.IIS.4.0 IIS 4.0 allintitle:Welcome to Windows NT 4.0 Option Pack IIS 4.0 allintitle:Welcome to Internet Information Server IIS 5.0 allintitle:Welcome to Windows 2000 Internet Services IIS 6.0 allintitle:Welcome to Windows XP Server Internet Services Many Netscape servers allintitle:Netscape Enterprise Server Home Page Unknown Netscape server allintitle:Netscape FastTrack Server Home Page

  21. CGI Scanner • Google can be used as a CGI scanner. The index.of or inurl searchs are good tools to find vulnerable targets. For example, a Google search for this: • allinurl:/random_banner/index.cgi • Hurray! There are only three… • the broken random_banner program to cough up any file on that web server, including the password file…

  22. CGI & Other Server Side Programs • Database errors • Login portals • Coldfusion • Remote desktop • Dotproject • Citrix Metaframe • MS Outlook web access

  23. Johnny’s Disclaimer • “Note that actual exploitation of a found vulnerability crosses the ethical line, and is not considered mere web searching.”

  24. Security Advisory + Source = Google Hack • Security Advisories and application patches for web application explain the newly discovered vulnerability • Analysis of the source code of the vulnerable application yields a search for un-patched applications • Sometimes this can be very simple; e.g.: • “Powered by CuteNews v1.3.1”

  25. Automation! • CGIs and other active content can be located in several places on a server. • Many queries need to be used to find a vulnerability. • There are two ways to automate Google searches: • Plain old web robots • The Google API: http://www.google.com/apis/

  26. Terms of Service • http://www.google.com/terms_of_service.html • "You may not send automated queries of any sort to Google's system without express permission in advance from Google. Note that 'sending automated queries' includes, among other things: • using any software which sends queries to Google to determine how a web site or web page 'ranks' on Google for various queries; • 'meta-searching' Google; and • performing 'offline' searches on Google."

  27. Google API • The Google API is the blessed way of automating Google interaction. • When you use the Google API you include your license string

  28. Gooscan • “The gooscan tool, written by j0hnny, automates CGI scanning with Google, and many other functions. • Gooscan is a UNIX (Linux/BSD/Mac OS X) tool that automates queries against Google search appliances (which are not governed by the same automation restrictions as their web-based brethren). For the security professional, gooscan serves as a front end for an external server assessment and aids in the information-gathering phase of a vulnerability assessment. For the web server administrator, gooscan helps discover what the web community may already know about a site thanks to Google's search appliance. • For more information about this tool, including the ethical implications of its use, see http://johnny.ihackstuff.com.”

  29. Google Search Appliance? • It sounds like a good idea to put a search appliance in the enterprise. • Then someone has their source code searched. • /* TODO: Fix the major security hole here */

  30. Googledorks? • http://johnny.ihackstuff.com/googledorks • The term "googledork" was coined by the author [Johnny Long] and originally meant "An inept or foolish person as revealed by Google." • After a great deal of media attention, the term came to describe those who "troll the Internet for confidential goods." • Either description is fine, really. • What matters is that the term googledork conveys the concept that sensitive stuff is on the web, and Google can help you find it. The official googledorks page lists many different examples of unbelievable things that have been dug up through Google by the maintainer of the page, Johnny Long. • http://tinyurl.com/2ywye • Each listing shows the Google search required to find the information, along with a description of why the data found on each page is so interesting.

  31. GooPot • According to http://www.techtarget.com, "A honey pot is a computer system on the Internet that is expressly set up to attract and 'trap' people who attempt to penetrate other people's computer systems." • For example, build a page that matches the query: • inurl:admin inurl:userlist • Then examine the referrer variable to figure out how the person found the page. This information can help protected normal sites. • http://ghh.sourceforge.net/

  32. Protecting Yourself from Google Hackers • Keep your sensitive data off the web! Even if you think you're only putting your data on a web site temporarily, there's a good chance that you'll either forget about it, or that a web crawler might find it. Consider more secure ways of sharing sensitive data, such as SSH/SCP or encrypted email.

  33. Protecting Yourself… • Googledork! Use the techniques outlined in this article (and the full Google Hacker's Guide) to check your site for sensitive information or vulnerable files. • SiteDigger from FoundStone automates this. • Uses the Google API so… • Only 1000 searches on Google per day • Free beer!

  34. SiteDigger 2.0 • http://tinyurl.com/28aeh • The tool requires Google web services API license key. • Your license key provides you access to the Google Web APIs service and entitles you to 1,000 queries per day. • System RequirementsWindows .NET Framework (can be installed using Windows Update)

  35. Protecting yourself… • Consider removing your site from Google's index.http://www.google.com/remove.html

  36. Robots.txt • Use a robots.txt file. Web crawlers are supposed to follow the robots exclusion standard. This standard outlines the procedure for "politely requesting" that web crawlers ignore all or part of your web site. This file is only a suggestion. The major search engine's crawlers honor this file and its contents. For examples and suggestions for using a robots.txt file, see http://www.robotstxt.org.

  37. User-agent: * Disallow: /images/ Disallow: /stats/ Disallow: /logs/ Disallow: /admin/ Disallow: /comment/ User-agent: Googlebot Allow: User-agent: BecomeBot Disallow: Disallow: / Disallow: * User-agent: MSNBot Disallow: Disallow: / Disallow: * By default tells others to not scan specific paths Allows Google to scan Tells BecomeBot and MSNBot to go away entirely. Please the robots.txt in the root of your HTML documents directory. See also Removing Your Materials from Google How to remove your content from Google's various web properties. http://hacks.oreilly.com/pub/h/220 Robots.txt generator http://tinyurl.com/7pc4k Example Robots.txt

  38. CAPTCHA • Completely Automated Public Turing Test to Tell Computers and Humans Apart • http://www.captcha.net/ • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Captcha

  39. Google Extras... • Translation and Language options - over 100 to choose from: http://www.google.com/language_tools • Stock Quotes - enter stocks:, example: stocks:GOOG • Newsgroups - http://groups.google.com • Calculator - "1024 minus 768" or "12 to the 10 power" • Froogle - http://froogle.google.com • Images - http://images.google.com • Spell Checking - just type it in: "convienence" • Blogger - http://www.blogger.com/start Extras can be found at http://www.google.com/help/features.html

  40. Sets from Google Labs • http://labs.google.com/sets • Automatically create sets of items from a few examples. • When you’re tired of relating keywords yourself, let Google do it for you….

  41. References http://bss.sfsu.edu/bsscomputing/training/onthespot/alexkeller_Google_Hacks.ppt http://www.googleguide.com/advanced_operators.html Google Hacking Mini Guide by Johnny Long http://www.informit.com/articles/article.asp?p=170880&rl=1 Search Engine Watch: http://searchenginewatch.com

  42. References • Google Hacks: 100 Industrial-Strength Tips & Tools • by Tara Calishain, Rael Domfest • Protect yourself from Google hacking: http://tinyurl.com/8q3fg • Johnny I Hack Stuff: http://johnny.ihackstuff.com • Google:http://www.google.com • http://www.i-hacked.com/content/view/23/42/ • HowStuffWorks: • http://computer.howstuffworks.com/search-engine1.htm

  43. Interesting Searches… • Source http://www.i-hacked.com/content/view/23/42/ • intitle:"Index of" passwords modified • allinurl:auth_user_file.txt • "access denied for user" "using password“ • "A syntax error has occurred" filetype:ihtml • allinurl: admin mdb • "ORA-00921: unexpected end of SQL command“ • inurl:passlist.txt • "Index of /backup“ • "Chatologica MetaSearch" "stack tracking:"

  44. Credit Cards • Number Ranges to find Credit Card Numbers • Amex Numbers: 300000000000000..399999999999999 • MC Numbers: 5178000000000000..5178999999999999 • visa 4356000000000000..4356999999999999

  45. Listings of what you want • change the word after the parent directory to what you want • "parent directory " DVDRip -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums • "parent directory "Xvid -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums • "parent directory " Gamez -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums • "parent directory " MP3 -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums • "parent directory " Name of Singer or album” -xxx -html -htm -php -shtml -opendivx -md5 -md5sums

  46. Music • You only need add the name of the song/artist/singer. • Example: intitle:index.of mp3 jackson

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